[Crib-list] TODAY -- Friday, October 6, 2006 -- COMPUTATIONAL RESEARCH IS BOSTON SEMINAR
Shirley Entzminger
daisymae at math.mit.edu
Fri Oct 6 09:46:13 EDT 2006
T O D A Y . . .
COMPUTATIONAL RESEARCH in BOSTON SEMINAR
DATE: FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2006
TIME: 12:30 PM
LOCATION: Building 32, Room 144 (Stata Center)
Pizza, salad and beverages will be provided.
Title: COUPLED SYSTEMS: THEORY AND EXAMPLES
Speaker: MARTIN GOLUBITSKY (University of Houston)
ABSTRACT:
A coupled cell system is a collection of interacting dynamical systems.
Coupled cell models assume that the output from each cell is important and
that signals from two or more cells can be compared so that patterns of
synchrony can emerge. We ask: How much of the qualitative dynamics observed
in coupled cells is the product of network architecture and how much depends
on the specific equations?
The ideas will be illustrated through a series of examples and theorems. One
example shows how a frequency filter / amplifier can be built from a small
three-cell feed forward network; and a second illustrates patterns of
synchrony in lattice dynamical systems. One theorem gives necessary and
sufficient conditions for synchrony in terms of network architecture; and a
second shows that synchronous dynamics may itself be viewed as dynamics in a
coupled cell system through a quotient construction.
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